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. .
'Rocky' rehashed: if you've read
the movie, then you gotta' see
Red age roars:
but Dakota dump
/ By BOB NEDELKOFF-10 shouldn't shake the review
Squatter's rights: Maryland maul
new club / ByLAURECHARLES- 14
~deigns use
of gym facility
/By VICKY L. DEMPSEY-15
I s I L L E •
Vol. 50, No.4 September 15, 1978
Unrelated: Frank Gilbert (facing) and Alan Kinsella pass an early T hursday afternoon astride the Humanities Building
photo by Mike Heitz
By TOM MURRAY
Something is happening in Iran.
A week ago, student~. teen ­agers,
out-of-work urbanite and
veiled women began a prote t
march down a street in Tehran.
The crowd grew in to a mob and
the cache of troops grew into a
formidable wall.
The name of the man \\ ho threw
the fir. t tone, or of the oldier
who set the first charge of tear­gas
i~ unknown.
When the army opened fire, 97
people died.
"The -.oldicrs fired submachine­gun
~ in the air and then they
fired them into the ground,'' re­ported
a ter'>e As..,ociated Press
di'-tpatch.
According to the AP wire,
"many blood-<,oaked demon­strators
fell to the ground and
were hauled away in tru ck" after
the battle."
The Shah had declared martial
law in 12 cities.
The government impo. ed an
iron curtain on news photographs
transmitted from the country.
Reasons for the recent revolt
in Iran appear contradictory,
but we think we know why.
Four members of Parliament
walked out when the new prime
minister, Jaafar Sharif-Emani,
tried to speak.
Iran's capitol, Tehran, was et
:tfire Friday night.
Something happening in
Iran?
Why?
The Contradktion and the Couse
The \pecific reason i'> not clear.
Thi., 1s becau~e there appear to be
two contradictory reasons for the
widespread civil unrest in Iran .
Observers outside the country
say that oppoc,ition to the Shah 1
led by traditional Moslem~ who
arc conservative, right-wi.ng and
generally dis\atisfied with the
growth of liberal attitude.., con-cerning
custom, dres , and mor­ality.
Observers outside Iran - ob­servers
who li ten to Iranian col­lege
students - are told that the
Shah is repre sive, a dictator who
ha'i stifled both economi... and
progressive political benefits to
the oppres ed.
Two reasons for di c;ent. Each
appears to lie in polar opposi­tion
upon the ~phere of political
motivation.
im:e it is impossible for thi
reporter to gather information
from vithm the ~hroud of pr~ .•
cemorship in Iran, these ond of
the t\\O argument' above \\Ill
take nrinrit~ for the moment.
The fhree Horn~ of lh<.> Dilemma
In the- leaflet distributed by
Iranian tudentc; in the U .. , Mos­lem<,
arc credited \\ith spearhead­ing
opposition to the hah, but
references to them in · tuden t
protest li terature is lower case:
"mmlem," instead of Moslem.
Thi.., is not unlike crediting the
Continued lo pa~e 4

. .
'Rocky' rehashed: if you've read
the movie, then you gotta' see
Red age roars:
but Dakota dump
/ By BOB NEDELKOFF-10 shouldn't shake the review
Squatter's rights: Maryland maul
new club / ByLAURECHARLES- 14
~deigns use
of gym facility
/By VICKY L. DEMPSEY-15
I s I L L E •
Vol. 50, No.4 September 15, 1978
Unrelated: Frank Gilbert (facing) and Alan Kinsella pass an early T hursday afternoon astride the Humanities Building
photo by Mike Heitz
By TOM MURRAY
Something is happening in Iran.
A week ago, student~. teen ­agers,
out-of-work urbanite and
veiled women began a prote t
march down a street in Tehran.
The crowd grew in to a mob and
the cache of troops grew into a
formidable wall.
The name of the man \\ ho threw
the fir. t tone, or of the oldier
who set the first charge of tear­gas
i~ unknown.
When the army opened fire, 97
people died.
"The -.oldicrs fired submachine­gun
~ in the air and then they
fired them into the ground,'' re­ported
a ter'>e As..,ociated Press
di'-tpatch.
According to the AP wire,
"many blood- not clear.
Thi., 1s becau~e there appear to be
two contradictory reasons for the
widespread civil unrest in Iran .
Observers outside the country
say that oppoc,ition to the Shah 1
led by traditional Moslem~ who
arc conservative, right-wi.ng and
generally dis\atisfied with the
growth of liberal attitude.., con-cerning
custom, dres , and mor­ality.
Observers outside Iran - ob­servers
who li ten to Iranian col­lege
students - are told that the
Shah is repre sive, a dictator who
ha'i stifled both economi... and
progressive political benefits to
the oppres ed.
Two reasons for di c;ent. Each
appears to lie in polar opposi­tion
upon the ~phere of political
motivation.
im:e it is impossible for thi
reporter to gather information
from vithm the ~hroud of pr~ .•
cemorship in Iran, these ond of
the t\\O argument' above \\Ill
take nrinrit~ for the moment.
The fhree Horn~ of lh Dilemma
In the- leaflet distributed by
Iranian tudentc; in the U .. , Mos­lem